▲ | chubot 8 days ago | |
You could say "Linux was CREATED out of thin air", and I wouldn't argue with you. But creation only counts for so much -- without support, Linux could still be a hobby project that "won't be big and professional like GNU" I'm saying Linux didn't APPEAR out of thin air, or at least it's worth looking deeper into the reasons why. "Appearing" to the general public, i.e. making widely useful software, requires a large group of people over a sustained time period, like 10 years. ---- i.e. Right NOW there are probably hundreds of projects like Linux that you haven't heard of, which don't necessarily align with funders I would actually make the comparison to GNU -- GNU is a successful project, but there are various efforts underneath it that kind of languish. Look at High Priority Free Software Projects - https://www.fsf.org/campaigns/priority-projects/ - Decentralization, federation, and self-hosting - Free drivers, firmware, and hardware designs - Real-time voice and video chat - Internationalization of free software - Security by and for free software - Intelligent personal assistant I'm saying that VIDEO CODECS might be structurally more similar to these projects, than they are to the Linux kernel. i.e. making a freely-licensed kernel IS aligned with Red Hat, Intel, Google, but making an Intelligent Personal Assistant is probably not. Somebody probably ALREADY created a good free intelligent personal assistant (or one that COULD BE as great as Linux), but you never heard of them. Because they don't have hundreds of companies and thousands of people aligned with them. | ||
▲ | cwizou 6 days ago | parent [-] | |
My point was, a lot of the early corporate support were smallish companies built specifically around Linux. RedHat is the perfect example of that, it started as a university project to make a distro. It took a while (and a lot of pain) to get a lot of driver vendors to come fully into the project, yet Linux was already gaining a bunch of traction at that time (say last half of 90s). I'll give you that Intel was always more or less a good actor though! But Google didn't exist when Linux already mattered. And when Google was created, they definitely benefited a lot from it, basing much of their infra on it. Marketing needs (and laywer approval) can bring support faster than most things. Opus for audio is a good example of that too. |